Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.26.4 (RNase H)
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Homodimeric EIAV p51/51 and heterodimeric EIAV p66/51 reverse transcriptase were purified in order to compare the different modes of DNA synthesis supported by the enzymes. Analysis of the dimerization behavior of the EIAV enzymes indicates that the dimer stability of EIAV reverse transcriptase enzymes is higher than that of their HIV-1 reverse transcriptase counterparts. EIAV p51/51 polymerizes DNA distributively whereas DNA synthesis by EIAV p66/51 is processive. Steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetic analyses of primer/template binding and nucleotide incorporation were performed with both enzymes to determine the reasons for the different polymerization behavior. Equilibrium fluorescence titrations demonstrated that the Kd values of EIAV p51/51 for binding of DNA/DNA and DNA/RNA substrates are increased 10-fold and 28-fold, respectively, as compared to EIAV p66/51. Stopped-flow measurements with DNA/DNA show that the increase in the Kd is in part due to a 17. 4-fold higher dissociation rate constant (k-1) for EIAV p51/51. Additionally, with EIAV p51/51, kdiss is increased 7-fold for DNA/DNA and 14-fold for DNA/RNA primer/template substrates, respectively. The lack of the RNase H domain in EIAV p51/51 leads to differences in the pre-steady-state kinetics of nucleotide incorporation on DNA/DNA and DNA/RNA templates. The burst of both enzymes is composed of two phases for both substrates, and the values for the corresponding pre-steady-state burst rates, kpol1 and kpol2, are similar for both enzymes, implying the formation of identical polymerase active sites. However, the amplitudes of the two phases differ with DNA/DNA templates, indicating a different distribution between two states varying greatly in their kinetic competence.
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PMID:Analysis of the polymerization kinetics of homodimeric EIAV p51/51 reverse transcriptase implies the formation of a polymerase active site identical to heterodimeric EIAV p66/51 reverse transcriptase. 972 26

HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT) utilizes RNA oligomers to prime DNA synthesis. The initiation of reverse transcription requires specific interactions between HIV-1 RNA, primer tRNA3Lys, and RT. We have previously shown that extension of an oligodeoxyribonucleotide, a situation that mimicks elongation, is unspecific and differs from initiation by the polymerization rate and dissociation rate of RT from the primer-template complex. Here, we used replication intermediates to analyze the transition from the initiation to the elongation phases. We found that the 2'-hydroxyl group at the 3' end of tRNA had limited effects on the polymerization and dissociation rate constants. Instead, the polymerization rate increased 3400-fold between addition of the sixth and seventh nucleotide to tRNA3Lys. The same increase in the polymerization rate was observed when an oligoribonucleotide, but not an oligodeoxyribonucleotide, was used as a primer. In parallel, the dissociation rate of RT from the primer-template complex decreased 30-fold between addition of the 17th and 19th nucleotide to tRNA3Lys. The polymerization and dissociation rates are most likely governed by interactions of the primer strand with helix alphaH in the p66 thumb subdomain and the RNase H domain of RT, respectively.
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PMID:Contacts between reverse transcriptase and the primer strand govern the transition from initiation to elongation of HIV-1 reverse transcription. 973 33

In order to study the inferences of structure for mechanism, the collective motions of the retroviral reverse transcriptase HIV-1 RT (RT) are examined using the Gaussian network model (GNM) of proteins. This model is particularly suitable for elucidating the global dynamic characteristics of large proteins such as the presently investigated heterodimeric RT comprising a total of 982 residues. Local packing density and coordination order of amino acid residues is inspected by the GNM to determine the type and range of motions, both at the residue level and on a global scale, such as the correlated movements of entire subdomains. Of the two subunits, p66 and p51, forming the RT, only p66 has a DNA-binding cleft and a functional polymerase active site. This difference in the structure of the two subunits is shown here to be reflected in their dynamic characteristics: only p66 has the potential to undergo large-scale cooperative motions in the heterodimer, while p51 is essentially rigid. Taken together, the global motion of the RT heterodimer is comprised of movements of the p66 thumb subdomain perpendicular to those of the p66 fingers, accompanied by anticorrelated fluctuations of the RNase H domain and p51 thumb, thus providing information about the details of one processivity mechanism. A few clusters of residues, generally distant in sequence but close in space, are identified in the p66 palm and connection subdomains, which form the hinge-bending regions that control the highly concerted motion of the subdomains. These regions include the catalytically active site and the non-nucleoside inhibitor binding pocket of p66 polymerase, as well as sites whose mutations have been shown to impair enzyme activity. It is easily conceivable that this hinge region, indicated by GNM analysis to play a critical role in modulating the global motion, is locked into an inactive conformation upon binding of an inhibitor. Comparative analysis of the dynamic characteristics of the unliganded and liganded dimers indicates severe repression of the mobility of the p66 thumb in RT's global mode, upon binding of non-nucleoside inhibitors.
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PMID:Collective motions in HIV-1 reverse transcriptase: examination of flexibility and enzyme function. 988 65

The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) reverse transcriptase (RT) is a heterodimeric enzyme composed of a 66 kDa (p66) and a 51 kDa (p51) subunit. Recently we showed that p51 plays an important role in the conformation of p66 within the HIV-1 RT heterodimer and hence appears to influence its catalytic activities [Amacker, M., and H ubscher, U. (1998) J. Mol. Biol. 278, 757-765]. This was further investigated here via construction of three intramolecular chimeras of HIV-1 and FIV RTs. The first 25 and 112 amino acids of the N terminus, respectively, as well as the last 22 amino acids of the C terminus in the p51 subunit of HIV-1 RT were exchanged with the corresponding regions of the FIV RT and combined with the wild-type HIV-1 p66. Characterization of these chimeric RT heterodimers demonstrated significant biochemical differences in (i) DNA-dependent DNA synthesis, (ii) strand displacement DNA synthesis, and (iii) RNase H activity. Our results indicate that both the N and C termini of HIV-1 RT p51 appear to be important in stabilizing the RT heterodimer for enzymatic functions.
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PMID:Intramolecular chimeras of the p51 subunit between HIV-1 and FIV reverse transcriptases suggest a stabilizing function for the p66 subunit in the heterodimeric enzyme. 993 Oct 31

Cys(38) and Cys(280) of p66/p51 human immunodeficiency virus type 1 reverse transcriptase (HIV-1 RT) can be converted to Ser without affecting enzyme function. We have exploited this feature to construct and purify "monocysteine" RT derivatives for site-specific modification with the photoactivable cross-linking agent, p-azidophenacyl bromide. Acylation of a unique cysteine residue introduced at the extreme C terminus of the p66 subunit (C(561)) with an azidophenacyl group allowed us to probe contacts between residues C-terminal to alpha-helix E' of the RNase H domain and structurally divergent nucleic acid duplexes. In a binary complex of RT and template-primer, we demonstrate efficient cross-linking to primer nucleotides -21 to -24/-25, and template nucleotides -18 to -21. Cross-linking specificity was confirmed by an analogous evaluation following limited primer extension, where the profile is displaced by the register of DNA synthesis. Finally, contact with a DNA primer hybridized to an isogenic RNA or DNA template indicates subtle alterations in cross-linking specificity, suggesting differences in nucleic acid geometry between duplex DNA and RNA/DNA hybrids at the RNase H domain. These data exemplify how site-specific acylation of HIV-1 RT can be used to provide high resolution structural data to complement crystallographic studies.
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PMID:Probing contacts between the ribonuclease H domain of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase and nucleic acid by site-specific photocross-linking. 1074 61

Crystallographic studies of the Mn(2+)-doped RNase H domain of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 reverse transcriptase (HIV-1 RT) have revealed two bound Mn2+ separated by approximately 4A and surrounded by a cluster of four conserved carboxylates. Escherichia coli RNase H is structurally similar to the RNase H domain of HIV-1 RT, but requires one divalent metal cation for its activity, implying either that the HIV-1 RT RNase H domain contrasts in its ability to bind two divalent metal ions, or that the crystallographic data reflect specific use of Mn2+ and/ or the doping technique employed. Metal binding stoichiometry has been determined for Mn2+ and the biologically more relevant Mg2+ cation by solution calorimetric studies of native and recombinant p66/p51 HIV-1 RT. Three Mn2+ ions bind to HIV-1 RT apo-enzyme: one at the DNA polymerase and two at the RNase H catalytic center, the latter being consistent with crystallographic results. However, only one Mg2+ ion is bound in the RNase H catalytic center. Several mechanistic implications arise from these results, including the possibility of mutually exclusive Mg2+ binding sites that might be occupied according to the specific reaction being catalyzed by the multifunctional RNase H domain. The occurrence of distinct binding stoichiometries for Mg2+ and Mn2+ to multifunctional enzymes has previously been reported.
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PMID:Metal-ion stoichiometry of the HIV-1 RT ribonuclease H domain: evidence for two mutually exclusive sites leads to new mechanistic insights on metal-mediated hydrolysis in nucleic acid biochemistry. 1076 38

HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (HIV-1 RT) is a multifunctional enzyme responsible for converting viral RNA into preintegrative DNA during the early stages of viral infection. DNA polymerase and RNase H activities are required, and several conformationally distinct primer-templates must be accommodated by the enzyme during the process. Parameters of interaction between model substrates (ligands) and HIV-1 RT (wild type p66/p51 and the RNase H-deficient mutant p66(E478Q)/p51) (analytes) were estimated by surface plasmon resonance at 25 degrees C, pH 8.0. Binding of RT to the ligands is specific and can be analyzed using a conventional 1:1 binding algorithm. RNA-DNA hybrids with 5'-template overhangs of 6 and 12 nucleotides bind to RT approximately one order of magnitude stronger than the corresponding 36-mer with blunt ends due to slower dissociation. Immobilization of the latter through either the 5'-end of RNA or DNA strand does not change the equilibrium constant (K(D)) for wild-type RT but the values of kinetic constants of association and dissociation differ significantly. For the p66(E478Q)/p51 enzyme, orientation effects are notable even altering the K(D) value. Binding of the p66(E478Q)/p51 to any RNA-DNA hybrids is slightly stronger compared with wild type. Data can be interpreted in terms of the mechanism of reverse transcription.
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PMID:HIV-1 reverse transcriptase interaction with model RNA-DNA duplexes. 1140 Dec 93

Retroviral reverse transcriptases (RTs) have both DNA polymerase and ribonuclease H (RNase H) activities. The RTs of HIV-1 and HIV-2 are heterodimers of p66/p51 and p68/p54 subunits, respectively. The smaller subunit lacks the C-terminal segment of the larger subunit (which is the RNase H domain). The structure of the DNA polymerase domain of HIV-1 RT resembles a right hand (with fingers, palm and thumb subdomains), linked to the RNase H domain via the connection subdomain. The RNase H activity of the Rod strain of HIV-2 RT is about tenfold lower than that of HIV-1 RT, while the DNA polymerase activity of these RTs is similar. A chimeric RT in which residues 227-427 (which constitute a small part of the palm and the entire thumb and connection subdomains) of the Rod strain of HIV-2 RT were replaced by the corresponding segment from HIV-1 RT, has an RNase H activity as high as HIV-1 RT (despite the fact that the RNase H domain is derived from HIV-2 RT). We analyzed the RNase H activity of wild-type HIV-2 RT from the D-194 strain and compared it with this activity of the RT from the Rod strain of HIV-2 and HIV-1 RT. The level of this activity of both HIV-2 RT strains was low; suggesting that low RNase H activity is a general property of HIV-2 isolates. The in vitro RNase H digestion pattern of the three wild-type RTs was indistinguishable, despite the difference in the level of RNase H activity. We constructed new chimeric HIV-1/HIV-2 RTs, in which protein segments and/or subunits were exchanged. The DNA polymerase activity of the parental HIV-1 and HIV-2 RTs was similar; as expected, the specific activity of the polymerases of all the hybrid RTs were also similar. However, the RNase H specific activity of the chimeric RTs was either high (like HIV-1 RT) or low (like HIV-2 RT). The origin of the thumb subdomain in the small subunit of the chimeric RTs (residues 244-322) determines the level of the RNase H activity. The strand-transfer activity of the chimeric RTs is also affected by the thumb subdomain of the small subunit; transfer was much more efficient if this subdomain was derived from HIV-1 RT. The data can be explained from the three-dimensional structure of HIV-1 RT. The thumb of the smaller subunit contacts the RNase H domain; it is through these contacts that the thumb affects the level of the RNase H activity of RT.
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PMID:The ribonuclease H activity of the reverse transcriptases of human immunodeficiency viruses type 1 and type 2 is affected by the thumb subdomain of the small protein subunits. 1153 32

HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT) is one of the main targets for drugs used in the treatment of AIDS, among them, the non-nucleoside RT inhibitors (NNRTIs). The flexibility of RT unliganded and complexed to double-stranded DNA (RT/dsDNA), in water, has been studied by means of molecular dynamics. The simulations show that RT flexibility depends on its ligation state. The RT/dsDNA trajectories show larger fluctuations in the atomic positions than uncomplexed RT, particularly at the tips of the p66 fingers and thumb subdomains. This increased flexibility is consistent with the ability of the p66 fingers of the RT/dsDNA complex to close down after the binding of a deoxynucleoside triphosphate (dNTP) molecule, as observed in the crystal structures of RT/dsDNA bound to dNTP. The two complexation states present different patterns of concerted motions, indicating that the bound dsDNA alters RT flexibility. The motions of amino acid residues that form the non-nucleoside RT inhibitor binding pocket upon complexation with a NNRTI are anticorrelated with the p66 fingers (in RT/dsDNA) and correlated to the RNase H subdomain (unliganded RT). These concerted motions indicate that binding of a NNRTI could alter the flexibility of the subdomains whose motions are correlated to those of the binding pocket.
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PMID:Molecular dynamics of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase indicates increased flexibility upon DNA binding. 1159 20

The natural form of the human immunodeficiency virus type one reverse transcriptase (HIV-1 RT) found in virion particles is a heterodimer composed of the p66 and p51 subunits. The catalytic activity resides in the larger subunit in the heterodimeric (p66/p51) enzyme while in the monomeric form it is inactive. In contrast, Murine leukemia virus RT (MuLV RT) is functionally active in the monomeric form. In the primary amino acid sequence alignment of MuLV RT and HIV-1 RT, we have identified three specific regions in MuLV RT, that were missing in HIV-1 RT. In a separate study, we have shown that a chimeric RT construct comprising of the polymerase domain of HIV-1 RT and RNase-H domain of MuLV RT is functionally active as monomer [20]. In this communication, we demonstrate that insertion of a peptide (corresponding to amino acid residues 480-506) from the connection subdomain of MuLV RT into the connection subdomain of HIV-1 RT (between residues 429 and 430) results in a functionally active monomeric chimeric RT. Furthermore, this chimeric enzyme does not dimerize with exogenously added p51 subunit of HIV-1RT. Functional analysis of the chimeric RT revealed template specific variations in its catalytic activity. The chimeric enzyme catalyzes DNA synthesis on both heteropolymeric DNA and homopolymeric RNA (poly rA) template but curiously lacks reverse transcriptase ability on heteropolymeric RNA template. Similar to MuLV RT, the polymerase activity of the chimeric enzyme is not affected by acetonitrile, a reagent which dissociates dimeric HIV-1 RT into inactive monomers. These results together with a proposed 3-D molecular model of the chimeric enzyme suggests that the insertion of the missing region may induce a change in the spatial position of RNase H domain such that it is functionally active in monomeric conformation.
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PMID:Insertion of a peptide from MuLV RT into the connection subdomain of HIV-1 RT results in a functionally active chimeric enzyme in monomeric conformation. 1171 55


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